INDEPENDENT NEWS

Cablegate: Israel Media Reaction

Published: Thu 1 Nov 2007 10:15 AM
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RUEHAS/AMEMBASSY ALGIERS PRIORITY 9620
RUEHAM/AMEMBASSY AMMAN PRIORITY 3070
RUEHAK/AMEMBASSY ANKARA PRIORITY 3725
RUEHLB/AMEMBASSY BEIRUT PRIORITY 2963
RUEHEG/AMEMBASSY CAIRO PRIORITY 1021
RUEHDM/AMEMBASSY DAMASCUS PRIORITY 3690
RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 0558
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 1024
RUEHRB/AMEMBASSY RABAT PRIORITY 7601
RUEHRO/AMEMBASSY ROME PRIORITY 5053
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH PRIORITY 9969
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RUCNDT/USMISSION USUN NEW YORK PRIORITY 6053
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UNCLAS TEL AVIV 003181
SIPDIS
STATE FOR NEA, NEA/IPA, NEA/PPD
WHITE HOUSE FOR PRESS OFFICE, SIT ROOM
NSC FOR NEA STAFF
SECDEF WASHDC FOR USDP/ASD-PA/ASD-ISA
HQ USAF FOR XOXX
DA WASHDC FOR SASA
JOINT STAFF WASHDC FOR PA
CDR USCENTCOM MACDILL AFB FL FOR POLAD/USIA ADVISOR
COMSOCEUR VAIHINGEN GE FOR PAO/POLAD
COMSIXTHFLT FOR 019
JERUSALEM ALSO ICD
LONDON ALSO FOR HKANONA AND POL
PARIS ALSO FOR POL
ROME FOR MFO
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: OPRC KMDR IS
SUBJECT: ISRAEL MEDIA REACTION
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SUBJECTS COVERED IN THIS REPORT:
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1. Mideast
2. Turkey
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Key stories in the media:
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The Jerusalem Post quoted senior diplomatic officials as saying on
Wednesday that it now seems unlikely that Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice will bring invitations to the Annapolis meeting
when she arrives in Israel on Saturday night. Last week the
officials had said that Rice would be arriving with a firm date for
the meeting and invitations. Israel Radio reported that Assistant
Secretary of State David Welch will arrive in Israel today for talks
SIPDIS
with FM Tzipi Livni and senior GOI officials, ahead of Secretary of
State Condoleezza Rice's visit to the country. Ha'aretz's Web site
reported that Livni and chief Palestinian negotiator Ahmed Qurei
(Abu Ala) met on Wednesday without their staff. Ha'aretz reported
that the IDF has been preparing a list of Israel's essential
security needs in advance of the Annapolis meeting. The newspaper
reported that the army will not commit to maps of borders and
territories, as it did during prior talks on a final status
agreement. Makor Rishon-Hatzofe reported that on Tuesday PA
Chairman [President] Mahmoud Abbas called on Arab and Muslim states
not to normalize relations with Israel.
Citing the Canadian-Jewish Web site, Maariv's online service NRG
reported that a high-ranking IDF officer told foreign journalists in
a meeting in Toronto that Israel is capable of dealing the Iranian
nuclear program a crushing blow, either destroying it or
significantly damaging the reactors. Reporting on Tuesday's debate
among Democratic candidates, Ha'aretz said that the Iranian nuclear
program "has taken over the presidential race."
The Jerusalem Post quoted Israeli defense officials as saying that
the IDF needs more than 1 billion shekels (around USD 252 million)
to complete the process of buying new gas masks and refurbishing
millions of those being collected from the public.
Ha'aretz and Israel Radio reported that a periodic report issued by
the UN has, for the first time, specifically defined the Sheba Farms
area based on recent cartographic work. The report also criticizes
the rearmament of paramilitary groups in Lebanon, particularly
Hizbullah. Israel Radio quoted UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon as
saying that several speeches by Hizbullah's leader Hassan Nasrallah
in the past few months "seem to confirm ... Israeli claims" that
Hizbullah possesses missiles capable of striking Tel Aviv.
The Jerusalem Post reported that Dr. Rowan Williams, the visiting
Archbishop of Canterbury, told the newspaper on Wednesday that
socioeconomic hardships caused by the West Bank security barrier are
contributing to the decline of the Christian population in the Holy
Land. The newspaper noted that Dr. Williams did not mention other,
long-standing explanations of the phenomenon, such as the growth in
Islamic extremism. The Jerusalem Post quoted Isa Bajalia, an
Arab-Evangelical pastor, as saying on Wednesday that he has been
threatened by a Palestinian security official in Ramallah, and that
he has fled to Jerusalem for safety.
The Jerusalem Post and other media quoted Deputy Defense Minister
Matan Vilnai as saying in the Knesset on Wednesday: "The 2007 budget
[for the security fence] is finished, and therefore the work is
subsiding." The newspaper reported that after studying the issue,
the Prime Minister's Office eventually agreed that the 2007 coffer
for the barrier was empty.
Electronic media reported that this morning nine Qassam rockets
landed in Sderot and the western Negev. IDF Radio reported that the
IDF killed four terrorists early Thursday morning in several
encounters along the Gaza security fence. Leading media reported
that on Wednesday afternoon border police prevented a terrorist
attack at the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Hebron, when they
apprehended an 18-year-old Palestinian armed with two knives, an
improvised handgun, and a suicide note.
Makor Rishon-Hatzofe quoted Egyptian Electricity & Energy Minister
Hassan Ahmed Younis as saying on Tuesday that in coming days Egypt
will start selecting sites for nuclear power plants.
Major media reported that on Wednesday the Knesset plenum passed in
a preliminary reading the bill proposal banning Israelis who visited
an enemy country from being elected to the Knesset.
The Jerusalem Post printed an AP wire story that the Board of
Immigration Appeals in Los Angeles has dismissed charges against a
pair of Palestinian men -- members of the "LA eight" -- accused of
terrorist ties, ending a 20-year government effort to deport them.
Yediot quoted Meretz founder and former education minister Shulamit
Aloni as saying in an interview with the Arabic-language weekly Ma'
Al-Ahdat that Defense Minister Ehud Barak and former IDF chief of
staff Dan Halutz should be put on trial at The Hague.
Ha'aretz and Yediot reported that on Wednesday, in an interim
ruling, the High Court of Justice ordered that a lot be reserved for
an Arab couple in the Jewish community of Rakefet in the Galilee.
The Jerusalem Post reported that on Wednesday Israeli and PA police
teamed up to improve traffic safety in the West Bank.
The Jerusalem Post reported that nearly three dozen US physicians
are coming to Israel for a "grueling, five-day, state-of the art"
course in emergency and trauma medicine.
Ha'aretz ran a feature on retiring US Navy chaplain (Rabbi) Rear
Admiral L. Harold Robinson.
All media highlighted the ongoing strikes in the education system.
Ha'aretz led with a report on budgetary constraints for drugs in the
Health Ministry.
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1. Mideast:
------------
Summary:
--------
Diplomatic correspondent Aluf Benn wrote in the independent,
left-leaning Ha'aretz: "In the short time remaining until Annapolis,
the negotiators should undergo an accelerated course and avoid the
mistakes that caused their predecessors to fail."
Liberal op-ed writer Yael Paz-Melamed commented in the popular,
pluralist Maariv: "The settlers know they have nothing to worry
about.... It turns out that the Americans do not really buy this
bluff."
Veteran journalist Evelyn Gordon wrote in the conservative,
independent Jerusalem Post: "Dividing Jerusalem would have ruinous
economic and security consequences without improving Israel's
demographic situation a whit."
Block Quotes:
-------------
I. "You Can Learn It in a Negotiations Course"
Diplomatic correspondent Aluf Benn wrote in the independent,
left-leaning Ha'aretz (11/1): "In the opinion [of American
negotiations experts Profs. Jeanne Brett and Lee Thompson], the
preferred approach to solving conflicts relies on finding and
leveraging the interests of both parties. That enables
give-and-take and increases the chances that the agreement will be
implemented. This appeal to interests is preferable to using force
-- as Israel does ... and to demanding rights -- as the Palestinians
do... Israel prefers interim agreements that will focus on
trivialities, such as the color of the Palestinian policemen's
uniforms, and will put off the discussion of Jerusalem, refugees and
permanent borders. That is Livni's proposal, which lies as the base
of the Israeli position in advance of the Annapolis meeting: to
discuss the 'nature of the Palestinian state,' and to set aside the
'core' for the time being. It is politically advantageous and
protects the coalition, but it harms the chances for a future
agreement. When they get around to discussing Jerusalem, the
parties won't have anything left to give in exchange. The scholars'
final advice concerns negotiations between representatives from
various cultures and nations. Here it is important to prepare well,
and to understand the internal codes, symbols and sensitivities of
the parties. On this matter everyone has made mistakes -- Israelis,
Palestinian and Americans, none of whom really understood their
interlocutors. In the short time remaining until Annapolis, the
negotiators should undergo an accelerated course and avoid the
mistakes that caused their predecessors to fail."
II. "Diplomatic and Regime Paralysis"
Liberal op-ed writer Yael Paz-Melamed commented in the popular,
pluralist Maariv (11/1): "As is well known, the Jewish head invents
patents [a popular saying]. The latest patent of the Prime Minister
and the Defense Minister, which is at the same time meant not to
evacuate outposts and not to get in trouble with the Americans, is
called 'talks with the settler leaders over a voluntary evacuation.'
They'll either be talking or they won't. The settlers know they
have nothing to worry about.... It turns out that the Americans do
not really buy this bluff.... If the [Annapolis] meeting fails, as
expected, we'll only blame the Palestinians. Israel will have
arrived there with clean hands."
III. "The Report Nobody's Talking About"
Veteran journalist Evelyn Gordon wrote in the conservative,
independent Jerusalem Post (11/1): "[Serious security implications
involved in a division of Jerusalem] should be obvious to anyone who
remembers the daily gunfire on Jerusalem's Gilo neighborhood during
the early months of the Intifada. Gilo was the only Jewish
neighborhood of Jerusalem to suffer in this fashion because it was
the only one within rifle range of Palestinian-controlled territory
-- namely, the village of Beit Jalla. And once the Israel Defense
Forces reasserted control over Beit Jalla, the shooting stopped.
Were parts of East Jerusalem handed over to the Palestinians,
however, numerous other Jewish neighborhoods would become as
vulnerable to Palestinian gunfire as Gilo.... The bottom line is
that dividing Jerusalem would have ruinous economic and security
consequences without improving Israel's demographic situation a
whit. And the [recent] JIIS [Jerusalem Institute for Israel
Studies] report [advocating the division of Jerusalem] has done a
valuable service by bringing these facts to the public's attention.
But that service will be wasted unless the public, the media, and,
above all, opposition Knesset members begin demanding that the
government either find solutions to these problems or drop the whole
idea of division."
-----------
2. Turkey:
-----------
Summary:
--------
Liberal columnist Larry Derfner wrote in the conservative,
independent Jerusalem Post: "It's one or the other: morality or
Realpolitik. As a nation of the world, Israel, along with its lobby
in Washington, has always chosen Realpolitik."
Block Quotes:
-------------
"Jews of Power, Jews of Truth"
Liberal columnist Larry Derfner wrote in the conservative,
independent Jerusalem Post (11/1): "It's one or the other: morality
or Realpolitik. As a nation of the world, Israel, along with its
lobby in Washington, has always chosen Realpolitik. What they may
not know, however, is that by now the world sees through them. The
word doesn't take seriously what an Israeli macher [big shot] or an
American Jewish macher has to say about the Six Million, not when it
sees that some Israeli leader and American Jewish macher shushing
everyone over the murders of 1.5 million other innocents.
Thankfully, those politicians are not the only Jewish voices on the
Armenian genocide, or on the Holocaust.... Either you value truth
first, or you value power first. Every Jew, every person, makes the
choice."
JONES
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